The Importance Of Race

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There is no such a thing like race. From years ago, race is just a man made due to the physical look, but biologically we all are the same. In fact, All human being shares 99.9 percent of the same DNA. Also, our body systems function similarly. Race is just a skin color and nothing else. Many years ago, people had negative views of other race folks. There were many racial discrimination and hatred between one race to another, but the majorities of those ideas changed. A person should not be judged by his or her physical look, but should be judged by internal appearances. Unfortunately, in this twenty first century, people are still divided by their physical appearance. Additionally, race is not the only force that separated us from one another, …show more content…

Ben Carson, a former neurosurgeon has written an essay “Gray Matter, the Stuff That Really Matters”, according to Carson, “in an episode of “The Twilight Zone” many years ago, a very beautiful and smart young woman was regarded as unsuitable for society. It was revealed at the end of the episode that everyone else was quite ugly, which, for that society, was the norm” (159). Similarly, when I was in high school some of my class-mates thought I was different from them just because I was born in a different country and my mother tongue was different from them. Some of my classmates said to me to go back to my own country. I had to face some difficulties beucsue I was different from the rest of my class mates. However, As a time went, I started learning that all people from the same racial group are not the same because some students thought I was different from them and some did not. To me, It does not matter about the way anyone looks, but his or her personality …show more content…

For example, there are many people with the same skin color, but different social class. Unfortunately, money is a large element that separated us from one another. For example, we can find separation between one person to another in the mall. Most of the time, some of the working class people tend to shop in less expensive stores. We can find discrimination between same color people. Jana King, a student from Louisiana State University has written an essay “In living color”, according to the King, “Bill Clinton was elected in 1993, some called him the first black president, not because of his skin color but because his birth into a single parent working class household, ability to play the saxophone and love of fast-food” (153). King statement proves that our social status divide us from one

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